Dana White: 'Nate Diaz Ready to Fight Again, but No Nick Diaz'

The standoff has come to an end with at least one of the Diaz brothers. UFC President Dana White announced on Saturday that Nate Diaz is finally ready to fight again.

Diaz was in Baltimore on Saturday night cornering Yancy Medeiros in his fight against Jim Miller at UFC 172. Fans haven’t really heard from the lightweight contender since he requested to be released from his UFC contract while in search of a significant pay raise.

@ufc@danawhite I would like to request to be released from the @ufc Its time for me to be on my way .. ?

The request for a pay increase came at a relatively odd juncture in Diaz’s career. Despite a stellar showing in his knockout win over Gray Maynard at The Ultimate Fighter 18 Finale, Diaz is 1-2 in his last three fights.

The sudden interest in a pay raise for Diaz likely stems from his teammate Gilbert Melendez’s blockbuster deal with the UFC. After testing the market, Melendez received a serious offer to jump ship to Bellator, but the UFC swiftly matched Bellator’s offer sheet to retain the services of the former Strikeforce lightweight champ.

Diaz’s request for a raise came only a few days after Melendez signed his new deal with the UFC.

The UFC has also run into similar problems with Nate’s older brother, Nick Diaz. The former Strikeforce welterweight champ retired from MMA over a year ago after losing back-to-back title fights to Georges St-Pierre and Carlos Condit.

All I said was, What am I getting paid? And [Dana White] said, Let me check your contract. And the last text I got from him was what I would be fighting for. I didn't consider fighting for that kind of money. I didn't say anything back to him, right, but usually that means something. I'm not considering even for a second fighting any of those guys for less than $500,000. There's no way.

While White seems sure of Nate’s return, Nick is a completely different story. The former welterweight contender is a polarizing figure that would undoubtedly serve as a major boost to UFC's pay-per-view numbers.

But then again, how can anyone expect White to give a title shot and a pay raise to a fighter coming off back-to-back losses?

“No Nick,” White confirmed at the post-fight media scrum. “Nick’s got a lot of money, man. I think Nick’s just going to kick back until he has to fight.”

JordyMcElroy is a featured columnist for Bleacher Report. He is also the MMA writer for Rocktagon.